Guide to Cambodia

Welcome to Cambodia!

You’re fresh off the airplane and have just moved to Cambodia. You need advice from someone who’s been there and done that. Since I’d rather not field your 2:00 AM worried phone calls unless you’re a REALLY good friend, I’ve decided to write this simple guide to expat life for you instead.

2014 ADDENDUM: Yes, there’s some political unrest in Cambodia these days. No, it is very unlikely to affect you in any way, and the country is perfectly safe for tourists. If you see a protest, walk the opposite direction. Don’t get involved, and don’t obstruct people with incessant picture-taking either.

JULY 2012 ADDENDUM: The Mystery Disease the Western media is currently having a fit over is very unlikely to harm you if you are traveling to Cambodia soon. The USA has not yet seen fit to issue a travel warning. The disease only appears to be harming young children.

Unless you are traveling with a young child, or are immune-compromised, you should be fine. (And you should think twice about traveling with young children or with immune system issues to Cambodia or any other developing country in the first place). You should be much more concerned about Dengue Fever and Malaria than you should be about MYSTERY DISEASE.

MAY 2012 ADDENDUM: Cambodia has seen a disturbing uptick in government violence against activists and protesters since the year began. Although this hasn’t yet affected foreigners to any real extent, it pays to be aware. Avoid protests if possible. If you do come across a protest, it is prudent to avoid getting involved. Police and guards can get aggressive if they see you taking photographs of unrest.

You are reasonably safe in Phnom Penh circa 2012, and very safe in the provinces. Despite anything you may have read about the Khmer Rouge, anarchy, and random violence against foreigners, Phnom Penh is a relatively safe city, and is certainly safer than most US cities of a similar size. I have not had a single run-in or scary moment in the year I have lived here.

It pays to exercise basic street smarts. Don’t walk alone at night, especially in neighborhoods on the outskirts of town. Don’t get too drunk, too high, or too all-around messed up to keep tabs on your surroundings. Never take anything out on a night on the town you can’t afford to lose. Drunk foreigners are an easy target for sticky-fingered opportunists. This is good advice everywhere in the world.

When going home alone late at night, it is a good idea for everyone, male and female, to make friends with a trustworthy tuk tuk or moto driver. Get his number and call him when it’s time to leave the bar. He will make sure you get home safe once you have established a relationship. Buy him a beer occasionally (just not too many).

Robberies

The most common crime against foreigners is purse snatching. This usually occurs when the victim is riding in a tuktuk or on a moto late at night. Hold onto your purse TIGHTLY when in transit, and sling it across your shoulder. Alternately, give in and wear a backpack like I do.

Home robberies are common, although usually non-violent. Look for an apartment high off the ground, with at least two heavy, locked doors between your inner domicile and the outside. Compounds with a guard and a dog are extra good. Always lock the doors to your porch at night, even if you are high off the ground.

Take special care with locking up your bicycle or motorbike. We used two heavy chains to lock up our bike, and it still got stolen. To this day, we’re not really sure how. Cambodian thieves are remarkably ingenious, if infuriating. If you can possibly keep your bike or motorbike inside of a compound or in a parking lot with a garage, do it.

Make friends with your Khmer neighbors and your landlord: they will keep an eye out for trouble, and it helps a lot if they like you.

Cambodians often drive drunk. This does not mean it is ever OK for you to do the same. Unless you really like broken limbs, amputations, pricy medical evacuations, or potential death.

A VERY IMPORTANT NOTE ABOUT STREET DRUGS

Do NOT do street drugs in Cambodia. I don’t care how good a night you are having, or how polite that nice drug dealer seems. DO NOT DO STREET DRUGS IN CAMBODIA.

Foreigners die every year from doing “cocaine” or other hard-core drugs—that are often laced with deadly chemicals.

Can I Eat That/Drink That Safely?

Water

Fun fact: The water treatment facility in Phnom Penh has won international awards. (A water expert told me this, so I know it must be true!) Tap water is OK to drink in Phnom Penh, and is 100% off limits in the provinces.

Although Phnom Penh’s water is clean, the pipes leading to your house may not be. It’s a good idea to buy a home water purifier for around $15. You can easily pick one up at or nearby Central Market.

Food

Profound intestinal and stomach discomfort is just part of life in Phnom Penh. Any expat discussion will invariably segue into horrifying bathroom-and-barf stories once you’ve got a few drinks in you. This is something you need to accept. Still, there are some food guidelines to follow:

Don’t eat the street food. Rules may be bent on this one if you are with a Khmer person you are reasonably sure likes you. I sometimes eat street noodles, but my stomach is cast in iron, and I’ve still regretted it once or twice. Donuts and fruit are usually OK.

If you have a choice, pick the restaurant with air conditioning. There seems to be a correlation between AC and cleanish food.

Cooking

When cooking at home, it’s safest to buy your ingredients from the major supermarkets like Lucky or Pencil, and not from the local open air market. The farmers market ethos doesn’t apply well to un-tested foreign stomachs. May be relaxed if you’re willing to soak your veg in bleach.

What If I Get Sick?

Medical Clinics

Emergency S.O.S is the best Western medical care facility in town, but it is pricey. It is on Street 51 and offers a choice of Khmer or Western doctors. They’ve treated my boyfriend and I well when we’ve visited, and can do X-rays – good to know in a country where some sort of motorbike mishap is almost a guarantee

Another option is the Naga Clinic, near the Independence Monument, which is slightly cheaper. I have not frequented any Cambodian clinics and have not heard good things.

Buying Medication

Pharmacies are everywhere in Phnom Penh. The U-Care pharmacy chain is the classiest in town, and it is guaranteed you are getting the real thing when you buy from them. You can often choose between the Western or Chinese/Indian version of the drug.

I don’t buy anything more pyschoactive than Advil and sunscreen from independent pharmacies here. Independent pharmacies in Cambodia have been known to sell fake or substitute medications. This is not a risk you want to take.

There is no such thing as a “prescription” drug here. Prescription drugs that can cost $15 to $20 a tablet back home on the illegal market in the US retail for $6 or $10 a box in Cambodia.

Fact is, pretty much anything you can think of is available over the counter in Phnom Penh’s thousands of pharmacies, including drugs such as Xanax, Valium, codeine-containing painkillers, Colonopin, and others. Be responsible, kids.

Be aware that “uppers” such as Ritalin, Dexedrine, and Adderall are NOT available in Cambodia. If you need these drugs, it is best to bring them from home, or have them sent to you.

Medical Emergencies

Emergency S.O.S is expensive, but is open 24 hours and should be your first choice for injuries, serious illness, and other sudden problems. They can tell you if your emergency is bad enough to warrant leaving the country, which brings me to……

Serious Medical Problems

Buy evacuation insurance. Do it right now. I have personally seen terrible, terrible things happen to people who did not. Insured or no, if you have a serious injury, illness, or mental problem, do not stay in Cambodia.

Cambodia simply does not have top-notch medical facilities yet. Singapore is your best option. Bangkok will work too.

Where Should I Shop?

Cambodian Markets

Central Market (Psaar Thmei) is good for kitchenware, t-shirts and dresses, jewelry, and souvenirs for the folks back home. It also has the cleanest food section, although I’d still be careful if I were you. Prices are higher than elsewhere here, so some gentle bargaining is a good idea.

Russian Market (Pssar Tuol Tom Pong) has the best clothing selection and is the best place to buy DVDs. It’s also good for home wares such as lights, objects d’ art, pretty ceramic dishes, paintings, and other aesthetically pleasing things. Wholesale (and bootleg) books can be found at a couple of stands along the market’s edge. Avoid the food section at all costs, although the fresh orange juice is tasty.

O’Russei market is three stories of utter Asian-inflected chaos, but can be incredibly useful for the braver expatriate. Everything from shoes to machetes to video games to durians to rollerblades to clothing to machine parts is sold here. Here, you will walk through seemingly endless sections of shoes, random electronic parts, stationary weird t-shirts, and dried sea animals of every possible species.

Westerners just don’t seem to go to O’Russei, and prices usually are not marked up as a result. Be emotionally prepared for the sensory and olfactory assualt. If you are, O’Russei has the best deals in town.

Tuk-tuk drivers will often stare at you in blank confusion or start snickering when you ask to go to O’Russei. Be not afraid.

Grocery Stores

Western grocery stores are are growing in number in Phnom Penh. They usually contain many departments and are somewhat akin to malls. It’s worth paying a little more for produce and meats that won’t give you giardia.

Lucky Market on Sihanouk boulevard has a wide selection of fresh meats, vegetables, and other cooking ingredients, as well as pre-marinated meats and pre-chopped meal ingredients if you’re short on time. Western snack foods (including Baked Lays, Pop-Tarts, and sugary cereal) are on offer, as well as some housewares. There’s a bakery, and a small deli selling roasted chicken and other lunch items. Department store upstairs.

Bayon Market on Russian Boulevard is a good choice for wholesale items and booze. Huge wine and liquor selection, and some Western snacks you can’t find anywhere else, such as corn meal, popcorn kernels, tortillas of all sorts, et all. Bakery attached.

Pencil Market off Norodom (it’s behind the KFC) is a cavernous place with an OK selection of produce and booze, and a huge selection of snack foods and other packaged food products. A very random selection of clothing and home wares can be found upstairs.

Bargaining

The Khmer bargaining style is gentle, low-volume, and low-key. This is not India or Mexico.

Yelling at a shopkeeper will usually just frighten him or her and will not get you what you want. Most Cambodians are not too interested in screwing you over on prices. Most sellers will drop a price considerably if you are polite, don’t make too much eye contact, and giggle a lot in the process.

A gentle “Ot tei, akon” (no thanks) is all you need if a shopkeeper is making too hard of a sell. Most will drop a price even more if you walk away. Don’t be a dick. (This all was hard for me to learn, as I’d previously spent a lot of time in India, but is a very important nuance.)

Returning Stuff

Yes, it can be done – if you’re 1. lucky and 2. nice. Most sellers at the major markets will take something back or make an exchange if you can prove it was damaged or broke prematurely. Don’t be a jerk about it, or the odds of you getting your money back or an exchange will drop precipitously.

Should I Learn to Speak Khmer?

Yes. There are lots of good language tutors in town, and Khmer is an easy language to learn. Not to mention that just about everything gets cheaper when you can speak to the motodop, tuk-tuk guy, or seller in their own language.

Cambodians seem to be very pleased when a foreigner bothers to pick up some Khmer. If you make an effort to learn the language, just about everyone you meet will be willing to help you with your pronunciation, or teach you a new word or two—or some creative swear words, if you’re lucky.

I get offended when otherwise educated and enlightened foreigners who have committed to living in Cambodia for one or two years disdainfully say Khmer is too “small” a language for them to bother with.

How would you feel if some foreigner washed up in your neighborhood back home and didn’t bother to learn an word or two of English? And then aggressively shouted at you in their native language and got pissed off when you didn’t understand?

Get it now?

Where Should I Live?

Expats tend to congregate in the BKK 1 neighborhood, where I live. There are other foreigner enclaves near Wat Phnom. There is no need to live near your fellow foreigners, of course, but central city locations are usually more convenient, and closer to stuff expats like, such as wine bars, Western food, high-end coffee shops and hygienic supermarkets.

Look for apartments that have recently been renovated. This will save you maintenance trouble down the line.

Beware of noise problems and nearby construction. Construction begins at 7:00 AM in Cambodia. Cambodians also like to keep roosters and paranoid, yappy dogs. You may want to consider investing in a pellet gun.

What Internet Service Should I Use?

Choices, choices. None of them very good if you’re used to Western or East Asian speeds. There are good reasons for this which I will not bore you with. Here’s a list of Cambodia’s many, many Internet providers.

Home Internet connections are relatively expensive here when compared to those in the West. For something usable – in my book, at least 1Mbps download speeds – you will probably pay at least $60 a month.

We have an Ezecom “high speed” connection we won in a raffle. At 8:00 PM, our download speed was 1.19 Mbps, which is actually pretty impressive for a home connection in Cambodia.

I haven’t experienced much better here in Cambodia – though I hear significantly higher speeds and even fiber optic connections are available through some ISPs if you are willing to pay for the privilege.

It’s easiest to pick an apartment or house that already has a wireless connection you can use. If not, ISPs will come install a connection at your home.

You usually will have to buy your own wireless router. Watch your ISP installation guy like a hawk – my boyfriend’s iPod went mysteriously missing when we had our Ezcom connection put in.

There is currently no such thing as a Western-level high speed connection in Cambodia, but as long as you resign yourself to frequent outages and waiting up to five minutes for a Youtube video to load, you will be fine.

Some people choose to go with a USB modem for their home connection, which you can put minutes on like a cellphone. Reasonably fast, usually come with restrictions or high prices when it comes to downloads and uploads, crazed Torrenters and YouTube addicts need not apply.

Great for journalists and others who need to access the Internet in weird places. Mobitel/CellCard and Ezecom sell them, as do some other providers.

Internet Censorship?

There isn’t any – well, not really. This ain’t China, and Cambodia’s Internet freedom is probably the best in Southeast Asia.

In 2011, the Cambodian government did attempt to block strident opposition blog KiMedia. As Cambodia’s Internet is primitive at best, they did this by sending threatening letters to every ISP operating here, ordering them to block the site.

Since the ISPs did not legally have to do this, some complied, and some did not. If you are an Internet freedom advocate (you should be) it’s best to go with an ISP that does not block KiMedia.

Think of KiMedia as a measure of how willing your ISP is to stand up to the government. If you want to read KiMedia and your ISP is one of the blockers, just use a proxy server.

Wifi

Free wifi is available at most restaurants and coffee shops. You can even get online at KFC. Speeds are highly variable, but hey, you’re not paying for anything more than a coffee, a croissant, or a bucket of chicken.

Is Cambodia Safe for Women?

Women do not need to exercise special precautions here – or any more than they would back home. I would worry more about your fellow expatriate men than I would about the locals. Khmer men are usually polite to foreign women, and there is little machismo attitude present.

There are always outliers, so exercise the same caution you might with anyone back home. Worst I’ve ever got from a Khmer male is the occasional, usually complimentary, comment on my appearance, in way more polite language than the catcalls back home. If they’re saying dirty things in Khmer, eh, I don’t understand em’.

Other women are everywhere at all hours of the day, which will make you feel more comfortable. Cambodian women usually dress fairly conservatively in the provinces, much less so in Phnom Penh.

Cambodian women often will wear long pants and long shirts during the day to avoid tanning their skin, as porcelain beauties are the ideal here. The low-cut dresses and short-shorts come out at night.

Cultural Learnings (How To Behave)

Cambodians really are pretty nice. This is due to a culture that avoids confrontation at all costs, recent history excluded. Simple rules of politeness apply. Speak softly and politely, and avoid verbal confrontation. Don’t touch people unless you know them. Hands placed together flat in front of your chest is a nice touch when saying “thank you” (orkun charoon).

When it comes to serious interpersonal problems, there tends to be no smoke and plenty of fire in Cambodia. In other words, when a Cambodian finally does snap, you are going to get little warning before hand, and an extreme verbal or physical reaction. It’s best to be polite, exercise some street smarts and caution, and avoid confrontational situations all together.

Dress Code

Cambodians dress somewhat conservatively, more so in the provinces, less so in Phnom Penh. Men wear long pants and dress shirts most of the time – you will guys folding their shirts up to expose their midriffs on hot days. Men can get away with wandering around in a krama (like a sarong) or athletic shorts if they are in front of their own home or working outside.

Women tend to wear long pants and long shirts during the day, both for modesty and to avoid tanning – white, pale skin is considered very alluring here. It’s no big deal for Western women to wear shorts and tank-tops during the day, but don’t go overboard – and that’s good advice anywhere.

Shorts and tank-tops within reason will not attract street harassment beyond what might be encountered in the West.

Some Khmer women do wear short dresses and revealing clothing in the evening and at social events, mostly in Phnom Penh. Dress codes aren’t really set in stone here.

Work Clothes

Dress more conservatively at the office than you would back home. Conservative work attire especially applies to women, I’m afraid. Long pants and skirts are best. No shorts, no tanktops, avoid exposed arms if possible. High heels, loud jewelry and tight pants, however, are perfectly fine.

Teenage to twenty-something volunteers and temp workers: THIS APPLIES TO YOU TOO. DON’T YOU ROLL YOUR EYES AT ME.

Where Do Expats Hang Out, Anyway?

I hope you like drinking, because that’s the expatriate activity of choice in Phnom Penh. Check Lady Penh for a list of events and meet-ups. Making friends with other expats is quite easy here. Making Khmer friends can be a lot harder.

Monthly “Elsewhere” parties seem to attract every expat in town for a pagan mating ritual. Locations change monthly.

The most popular dance club for the expat set is Pontoon, which features international DJs, dry ice, and expensive drinks. Best saved for late in the evening. Where roughly 80% of Phnom Penh expatriate hook-ups begin!

Other popular expat meet-up bars are Equinox and Elsewhere on Street 278, Rubies wine bar on Street 240, and the Blue Dragon near the Royal Palace.

Beloved hang-outs on Street 51 are Howie’s and Led Zeppelin. Led Zep’s extremely scary looking Taiwanese owner spins metal and rock, and serves up super cheap drinks and excellent pork and leek dumplings. Howie’s features Connect-4 playing waitresses, a pool table, and a painting of a naked lady. What more could you want.

Avoid the Heart of Darkness dance club, for Christ’s sake. The floor is sticky and everyone wants to molest you. Do not believe the Lonely Planet guide.

Journalists can meet up with their foul brethren on Thursday evenings at Cantina, a popular Mexican restaurant and bar on Sisowath Quay.

There are less lesbian-only offerings, I’m afraid. Lesbian owned bar Local 2 on St 144 by Sisowath Quay sounds like a good place to start. Another branch of the Local is located near Russian Market.

Oh My God, There’s Hookers Everywhere!

Yep. I advise you to get used to it. Patronizing said hookers is probably a bad idea if you are worried about your sexual health, but they’re not bad people. Just honest ladies trying to make a living. Most of em’.

Working girls tend to hang out at “hostess” bars, where a bunch of scantily clad young women compete for drinks and patrons attention. It’s up to you if you are comfortable entering these places or not.

Popular “working girl” hang-outs include Walkabout on St 51, Sharkies on St 130, and roughly 80% of the bars along Riverside. Avoid/seek out as you please.

Sex trafficking is a huge problem in Cambodia. However, the bars that Westerners frequent and that are located in popular tourist areas rarely use or employ trafficked women.

Don’t assume every prostitute is a helpless victim. Don’t assume every girl working in a hostess bar is a prostitute.

Most importantly: do not assume that every Khmer woman wearing revealing clothing is a prostitute. How would you feel if people shot you that knowing look when you were dolled up for a night on the town?

Pedophiles

Pedophilia is a big problem in Cambodia. Thankfully, efforts to stop sex tourism seem to be working, although the creepiest of the world’s creepy do have an unfortunate habit of washing up here.

The majority of pedophilia cases – and there are far, far too many of them – occur in the provinces between Cambodians.

Use your judgment and act if you see a suspicious situation involving an older person and a young child, especially in hotels or guesthouses.

Hi hi. I think its dog friendly enough. I lived and worked in Cambodia back in 07 and 08. (WHY am I back in the STATES I have NO IDEA! lol) My boss had a German Sheppard but him and his wife were fortunate enough to rent a house in PP, with most homes having an enclosed property with 8ft concrete walls the dog had ample room to wander. I lived in a good area in downtown PP near THE INDEPENDENCE MONUMENT with some nice parks near by. I don’t know who you are but congratulations and wish you the best. This blog that you’ve read is very accurate so take heed. I must also recommend learning Khmer and learning how to drive a scooter (but please not in PP, crzy drivers. Go to the provinces) it will open you up to a new world and people with greater cultural understanding and a fulfillment beyond the scope of what you have imagined. Good Luck and if you work with NGOs like I did your really going to need it.

We’ve been hanging out in Siem Reap for around 6 weeks. Tomorrow we’re off to Batambang then on to the big smoke of Phnom Penh. I’ve been a bit unsure of what to expect but am looking forward to it now.

I think the statement “Popular “working girl” hang-outs include Walkabout on St 51, Sharkies on St 130, and roughly 80% of the bars along Riverside. Avoid/seek out as you please” is incorrect.

I only know of one working girl bar along the riverside, and that’s California 2. Along the riverside is mostly restaurants for the tourists and expats avoid them as they are expensive and not the best food.

How about a mention of the most annoying tuk tuk and moto drivers hot spots?
If you like these people annoying you with constant “you want tuk tuk?” Then St 51, St136, St 102 and the riverside are the places to head.

Most expats learn to simply ignore them and never answer their constant chants, I have lived in PP for some time and very rarely walk along the riverside, if you want good priced – good food, then head further to the central market.

Also a note on pharmacy drugs in Cambodia, it is highly illegal to send any drugs, yes, even legal drugs by post from Cambodia.

Faine this is the first time I have come across your blog, and it is just fantastic. We have just moved to Phnom Penh, so this post is a valuable resource for us. So thank-you for putting this together 🙂

You have a real knack of getting across a great deal on information and insight, while keeping it very funny and light-hearted.

Hi my wife and I are coming for a 3 week visit in the last of oct/nov ,She is Khmer and me american(50)sboth of us coming to visit family and sight seeing and later plan to retire there would really appericate anyones feed back on things to do see etc thanks Tony

Thank you! This has made it so much easier for us. We are visiting June/July 2013 and this is very handy. My travelling companion was a bit worried about the dress for women. I am very happy that I read all of this blog because customs are also important.

There are LOTS of dentists in Phnom Penh. Unfortunately I don’t know which ones are good, but you can check Khmer440 or ExpatAdvisory for this information. Buying tools is no problem – O’Russei Market is the best place to go to look for them.

Today I went to the dentist, Sour Sdey Dental Clinic on Street 63 and the corner of Street 278, filling with root canal $45, the woman knew what she was doing, and I will be back for some other work I have neglected for too long.

Great information – thanks!
I am moving to Siem Reap in July and as a long time suffer of arachnophobia I just want to know how rampant the big furry kind are they in Cambodia? – did visit for four days in February this year and did not come across any in my travels (thankfully!). I’m originally from Country Australia so I have had my share of the creepy buggers but the though of finding a Tarantula in my bedroom freaks the hell out of me. Pathetic I know but I really want to prepare myself now. Planning on renting an apartment on the top floor if I can.

You’re not pathetic! Everyone has some sort of phobia. I’ve lived in Siem Reap for 3 years and the only tarantulas I’ve seen have been in baskets, fried and awaiting consumption. It doesn’t matter what floor you live on, there will be bugs of some sort. Honestly I’ve seen more spiders back in the States. The few I saw here were brown, not too big, and basically kept to the high ceiling. My phobia? Scorpions. After two years I hadn’t seen any and pretty much forgot to obsess about them…until that fateful day. I saw a small round object in the middle of my living room, poked it like a moron, and to my horror it unfurled its’ creepy stinger-tail/pinchers and ran unbelievably fast across the room. I sprayed an entire can of bug spray at its’ direction. It didn’t move. You want pathetic? I stayed in an upright fetal position in the center of my bed staring at it, simultaneously trying not to stare at it (is it moving? look away…don’t puke…is it moving? turn away…stop the silent screams…is it moving?look away…you DON’T have to pee…did it just move or are my eyes mocking me?look away…is it moving?…ad nauseum). I remained immobile for what seemed like hours with that shuddery/shivery/itchy skin condition that only bug terrors can provide. Finally my (Khmer) husband came home. Unable to speak, I pointed and made some primitive noises indicating fear and insanity. He calmly picked it up, expertly plucked out the stinger (“this part make the hurt”) and threw it in the trash. Then I had to hear in full detail about every time he’d been stung in the countryside as I waited for my brain to stop shaking.The point of my post-cum-novella (sorry!) is to say that while I can obviously empathize, I strongly recommend that you not give spiders a second thought. You may even never see a tarantula and will have wasted precious head space that can be devoted to all the creatures Cambodia has that are awesome. My favorites are the bicycle-riding/cola stealing/fruit begging monkeys, baby puddle-hopping frogs, geckos- they actually say “gecko”…or “f*** you” -interpretation depends on your mood, and the chickens that randomly saunter through my classroom. If you do happen to encounter your sworn enemy, know you’ll survive. I can’t say I’ll never cross paths with mine again, but I decided not to waste any more time worrying about it. Ultimately it boiled down to affecting an hour or so out of three years of my life. And I actually found a strange comfort in having “gotten it over with.” Best of luck to you…may Siem Reap be as kind to you as it has been to me (I really love living in Cambodia)…and may your trails be forever spider free!

Thank you for your great blog.My wife and I visited Phnom Penh.16th to 27th of Jan.we stayed at the King grand Boutique hotel in 258 st and as the room was on the 6th floor we had an amazing view of river and royal palace i also spent 3 nights in Siem Reap.as a long time singer musician in Oz. I went looking for some live gigs in both places.I think everyone was asleep after 11pm.
But in Phnom penh found a few expat bars one the Ally Cat had an open mic night.And place on the river “Paddy Rice” had a jam on thursday night with Bass and Drums.A South Korean CEO and his Cambodian work partner kept feeding us beers as I seemed to have them in stitches with my Boogy.We loved the place and the people and are seriously thinking of a Phnom Penh adventure.now our darling daughter is off to Uni in Melbourne.

This is a really great breakdown of expat life in Cambodia! We sometimes ship cars to the area for customers, many of whom are expats of course. We’ll definitely be directing them to this as a resource if they have any questions! Great job covering all the bases and addressing the common concerns.

This is a great resource and thanks for posting it. I’m considering relocating to Cambodia next year as a US expat. The catch is that I want to bring my car with me (I know it can be a hassle and get expensive). Do you have any input or info about doing something like that? So far I’ve only talked to a company (A1 Auto Trans) and they’ve been helpful, but I’d like to do some outside research of my own to make sure I understan the process as well.

Thank you I appreciate your info and time alot. I’m 29 and my name is Kha, my dad and my uncle survived the killing fields in Cambodia and I was born in 1986 here in Virginia in the US I’ve been meaning to go to Cambodia to help my dad and uncle find any remaining relative’s if any survived.My mom is American and even tho my parents separated when I was 5 I grew up with both in my life learning my khmer side and my red neck side wierd combo I KNOW…
my wife and her parents are Cambodian refugees like my dad except my wife was born here like me. my my dad still lives close by and my uncle lives close by as well but I’m on methadone maintenance and I’ve been on xanax for the past 10 years taking 3 milligrams a day so in order for me to travel to Cambodia I really want to make sure that I’ll be able to get my methadone and xanax…do you know if the pharmacy carries methadone liquid and if so it would be so beneficial if you could let me know if they have it and which Pharmacy does have it so that way before I come I can get them to stock up on some thank you again